You might be right Garry though it would depend on wind direction I guess. The second shot isn't a bumpy landing.. he still has a few feet to go.. unless of course he landed outside the fence and bounced over it
In general yes - using slightly less flap allows you to keep the speed up a tad - which gives better control authority, particualry useful for the rudder in strong x-wind conditions to prevent weathercocking. Each aircraft POH will have the specific recommendations for that type though.
In strong wind a lot of the wind componant would be ahead bringing the groundspeed down so really an increase in airspeed will not in effect result in a fast landing.........would that be correct?
Garry
Garry
"In the world of virtual reality things are not always what they seem."
Sounds good to me ! - a strong wind on the nose is also useful if you end up high on a visual approach as the reduced ground speed means it will take you longer to get to the threshold - not as I know anyone who's put that in practice though (clears throat).
The first one looks like good crosswind technique. Land on the upwind gear, rotate down to the nose, and as speed decreases, put the other main down. Dunno if I'd do it in a ATR, but that's how I was taught to land the Cessnas and Pipers I fly and how the guys that fly the R4D and other planes at the CAF wing land (although that's with tail draggers... ).